Rangers Not Troubled By Nathan’s Early Struggles

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Umpire Kerwin Danley walks back to the mound with Joe Nathan of the Texas Rangers during th game against the Seattle Mariners at Rangers Ballpark in Arlington on April 11, 2012 in Arlington, Texas. (credit: Rick Yeatts/Getty Images)

ARLINGTON (AP) - The Texas Rangers aren’t worried about Joe Nathan, even though their new closer has already lost two games.

Seattle rallied for three runs in the ninth inning against Nathan for a 4-3 victory Wednesday night.

“He’ll be fine,” said Michael Young, the Rangers longest-tenured player. “We have all the confidence in the world in Joe. We look forward to getting another lead and getting him back out there.”

Nathan (0-2), the long-time Minnesota Twins closer who signed with Texas last winter, needed only 11 pitches to save the Rangers’ opener. He got another save in their 1-0 win over Seattle on Tuesday night.

But there was also a loss in the second game of the season against the Chicago White Sox, when he allowed a leadoff homer in the ninth of a tie game.

On Wednesday night, John Jaso’s RBI single capped the three-run rally and his big debut with the Mariners.

The Mariners had gone 23 consecutive innings without scoring in the series before No. 9 hitter Jaso, as the DH in his first game, led off the eighth with a triple into the right-field corner off Alexi Ogando and scored on Dustin Ackley’s single.

“I was happy to finally get in there,” Jaso said, a catcher who made 67 starts for Tampa Bay last season. “I thought it was a good debut for me in a Mariners’ uniform.”

Jesus Montero, the DH his first five starts, got his first action behind the plate while regular catcher Miguel Olivo got a night off.

Justin Smoak led off the ninth with a single against Nathan (0-2) before Kyle Seager’s double. Montero then had a sacrifice fly and Michael Saunders an RBI double before Jaso blooped a curveball into short center.

“The only thing that I could see is they hit a lot of sliders, not terrible sliders. I think they’re looking for that pitch and waiting for it,” Nathan said. “A lot of those pitches were sliders down that they served into right and found outfield turf. Credit to them putting good swings on.”

Rookie left-hander Lucas Luetge (1-0) had two strikeouts in 1 1-3 innings for his first major league victory. Brandon League worked the ninth for third save in three chances.

Nathan actually has 263 career saves, yet only 16 since 2009 because of Tommy John surgery on his right elbow in 2010. He lost his job at one point last season with the Twins before finishing strong and getting 14 saves.

While the losses are disappointing, Nathan said he feels great physically.

Texas led 1-0 with two outs in the seventh before Kinsler hit a solo homer to left. Elvis Andrus immediately followed with an even longer shot for his first of the season.

Kinsler, who earlier in the day had finalized a new $75 million, five-year deal that kicks in next season, also doubled. But with pinch-runner Brandon Snyder at second base with one out in the ninth, Kinsler struck out before Andrus had an inning-ending liner to first.

Lewis, who had nine strikeouts in his opening day victory, struck out six with no walks against the Mariners. It was his 100th major league start in a career that began with Texas in 2002 and included two seasons in Japan before returning to the Rangers in 2010.

Alexi Ogando worked 1 1-3 innings, giving up his first run in four appearances this season when Jaso scored.

Nathan had saved his first two chances, including the Rangers’ 1-0 victory Tuesday night, but lost a game Saturday night against the Chicago White Sox after giving up a leadoff homer in the ninth of a tie game.

Kevin Millwood, Seattle’s oldest pitcher at 37, allowed one run with seven strikeouts and three walks over six innings in his first start of the season.

“He didn’t have it early on. He was up,” Wedge said. “It’s a credit to him that he’s able to find it. …. One of the best I’ve ever seen in regard to controlling damage. He did it in the first and later in the game.”

Millwood was with Texas from 2006-09. The only active pitchers with more than Millwood’s 2,565 1-3 career innings pitched or his 416 starts are 49-year-old Jamie Moyer and Livan Hernandez.

The back-to-back homers by Kinsler and Andrus came against right-hander Steve Delabar.

Earlier Wednesday, the Rangers announced the new deal for Kinsler, the two-time All-Star second baseman who twice in the past three seasons has had 30 homers and 30 stolen bases.

The 29-year-old Kinsler is in his seventh season, and his new deal includes a club option for 2018. He will make $7 million this season, and $13 million next year in the first year of the new contract.

Andrus, the 23-year-old shortstop in his fourth major league season, signed a three-year deal over the winter that takes him through his potential arbitration season.